Alaska Steamship Company, a Corporation v. Federal Maritime Commission and United States of America

399 F.2d 623
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1968
Docket22439
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 399 F.2d 623 (Alaska Steamship Company, a Corporation v. Federal Maritime Commission and United States of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Steamship Company, a Corporation v. Federal Maritime Commission and United States of America, 399 F.2d 623 (9th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

MERRILL, Circuit Judge:

The Federal Maritime Commission has regulatory jurisdiction over interstate water carriage to and from the State of Alaska. Where such carriage is combined with carriage by motor transport, in through-route and joint-rate arrangements, jurisdiction over rates lies with the Interstate Commerce Commission. 1

*625 Alaska Steamship Company is a common carrier by water, operating between Seattle, Washington, and various points in the State of Alaska and, until the events leading to these proceedings, has operated entirely under FMC regulation. In 1967 it entered into through-route and joint-rate arrangements with certain motor carriers and notified FMC of the cancellation of certain tariffs theretofore on file with FMC, to be superseded by joint-rate tariffs that had been filed with ICC. FMC suspended cancellation of the rates, conducted an investigation and subsequently ordered Alaska Steam to rescind its cancellation and continue to file tariffs with the FMC. Alaska Steamship Co. — Cancellation of FMC Port-to-Port Rates — West Coast/Alaska Trade, No. 67-52 (February 14, 1968). Its position in substance is that the through-route joint-rate arrangements are sham, serving to mask an effort at agency-forum shopping. Alaska Steam, by these proceedings, seeks review of that order under 28 U.S.C. § 2342. The ICC, in support of its own jurisdiction, appears as amicus curiae. Faced with what is, in essence, an interagency dispute and concerned over the possibility of forum shopping, the United States (nominal respondent in these proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 2344) has aligned itself with FMC.

The through routes brought into question by the FMC order are of two types: (1) those involving connections with local motor carriers in Seattle; (2) those involving connection with motor carriers in Alaska who utilize the Alaska State Ferry.

1. Seattle Connections

Alaska Steam has entered into arrangements with a motor carrier in Seattle whereby the motor carrier picks up cargo at the shipper’s premises and delivers it to Alaska Steam’s pier for loading and shipment to various Alaska ports. The motor carrier issues through bills of lading in its name covering the entire journey up to final delivery in Alaska and charges for the full journey. Similar arrangements are contemplated for shipments from various points in Alaska to final destination in Seattle.

The FMC characterizes this operation as “pickup and delivery,” and says that the charges for this service should be included in the water carrier’s tariff as “terminal charges” under § 2 of the In-tercoastal Shipping Act, 46 U.S.C. § 844 (1964). It contrasts such arrangements with those between “line haul” carriers. It argues that it was the latter type of connection with which Congress was concerned in providing for through routes and joint rates between water and motor carriers. It argues that Congress, in amending the Interstate Commerce Act in this respect, had no intention of making changes in existing practices; rather it was attempting to fill a void — to permit arrangements that could not, without such legislation, be enjoyed. FMC asserts that local pickup and delivery ar *626 rangements were available under FMC regulations without the need for creating a “through route” with a “joint rate.” As precedent it points to its decision in Matson Navigation Co., 7 F.M.C. 480 (1963). There Matson had engaged local carriers as Matson’s agents to perform pickup and delivery service in port areas. Matson paid the carriers the ICC tariff rates and included a charge for this service in its own tariffs. In its decision in that case FMC concluded that as long as such trucking service was in the nature of “pickup and delivery” as distinguished from “line haul,” it did not constitute a through route; that the charge for such service was a “terminal charge” and that the water carrier’s rates remained subject to FMC regulation.

FMC contends that, consistently with its position in Matson, we should here construe the term “through route” (as used by Congress respecting motor and water connections) as not encompassing connections with motor services that can qualify as pickup and delivery, since such connections remain available under FMC regulations.

The difficulty with this contention is that Congress did not apportion jurisdiction between the agencies on this basis. 2 The jurisdictional line was not drawn between line haul and pickup, 3 but at through routes which, historically, cover pickup and short-haul connections as well as connections between line-haul carriers. 4

The existence of a through route depends not on the length of the respective hauls of the participating carriers but on the nature of the arrangements between them and their commitments to their shippers. In Thompson v. United States, 343 U.S. 549, 557, 72 S.Ct. 978, 96 L.Ed. 1134 (1952), the Court approved the following definition proposed by the ICC:

“ ‘A through route is a continuous line of [carriage] formed by an arrangement, express or implied, between connecting carriers. * * * Existence of a through route is to be determined by the incidents and circumstances of the shipment, such as the billing, the transfer from one carrier *627 to another, the collection and division of transportation charges, or the use of a proportional rate to or from junction points or basing points. These incidents named are not to be regarded as exclusive of others which may tend to establish a carrier’s course of business with respect to through shipments.’ ”

Thus ICC doés not dispute FMC’s decision in Matson. An arrangement between carriers whereby one employs the other as agent for terminal delivery service, paying that carrier the ICC tariff rate, simply does not entail a joint rate. It does not entail obligations to the shipper such as are found in through routes. It does not present the regulatory problems presented by through-route and joint-rate arrangements.

When arrangements are entered into that do in fact constitute through-route and joint-rate arrangements, Congress has left their regulation with the ICC.

2. Alaska State Ferry

Alaska Steam does not call directly at all ports. It serves some indirectly by use of the Alaska Ferry. Cargo destined for Valdez, Alaska, is received at Seattle by Alaska Steam in vans which are carried to Cordova, Alaska. There the vans are delivered to a motor carrier which places them on trailers and drives them onto the Alaska State Ferry.

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Bluebook (online)
399 F.2d 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-steamship-company-a-corporation-v-federal-maritime-commission-and-ca9-1968.